JIM HOLT FOR U.S. SENATE

HOLT CAMPAIGN ANNOUNCEMENT SET FOR JANUARY 14

SPRINGDALE, Arkansas — Former State Senator Jim Holt, who
led the GOP ticket in the 2006 statewide elections, will announce his candidacy
in the 2010 U.S. Senate race at a series of events to be held January 14th.

Senator Holt will be flown to five campaign kick-off events in Little Rock,
Texarkana, Jonesboro, Ft. Smith and Springdale.

Holt says that this election is about bringing the nation back from the
brink. “Our government needs serious reform, and it needed it yesterday,” said
Holt. “Unfortunately, Arkansas' senator has been busy contributing to the
nation's problems,” said Holt, who cited incumbent Blanche Lincoln's cloture
vote on the ‘Health Care Reform Bill' as a recent example. “She essentially told
the people of Arkansas that our opinion meant absolutely nothing, and it wasn't
the first time,” he added.

Senator Holt summed up the sentiment of voters statewide: “I don't think the
people of Arkansas want to continue having a senator who is the tipping vote for
socialist agendas. Rather, they want leaders who heed our Constitution and the
various restraints which exist to prevent such agendas.”

Jason Sheppard, the Holt for Senate campaign's manager, said that the
response to a prospective Holt candidacy has been nearly overwhelming. “We've
clearly been given our orders: we've got a job to do,” said Sheppard, noting
that the campaign received more donations in a set of fundraising events held
last week than was raised in either of their primary campaigns in 2004 and 2006.
“Both of which Jim won against multiple candidates without even a runoff,”
Sheppard pointed out. “The number of hands-on supporters active in this campaign
has also been impressive,” Sheppard added. “Things are looking very good for our
team.”

Sheppard noted the difference between this election and the Holt/Lincoln
election of 2004, which he also managed. “As a campaign, we're in a much, much
more enviable position than we were in 2004. As a country, unfortunately, we're
in much worse shape,” Sheppard said. “'We were largely unknown then, and many
key people wrote the race off because of that combined with Lincoln's then
inexplicable popularity. Both these factors have changed,” he added. “Inside and
outside the state, the Holt team is blessed with a strong network of supporters
who are eager to see a return to Constitutionally-limited government,” said
Sheppard. “And Senator Lincoln continues to anger just about every category of
voter in this state.”